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		First domino in national redistricting fight likely to fall with Texas 
		GOP poised for vote on maps
		[August 20, 2025]  
		By JIM VERTUNO and NICHOLAS RICCARDI 
		AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — The first domino in a growing national 
		redistricting battle is likely to fall Wednesday as the 
		Republican-controlled Texas legislature is expected to pass a new 
		congressional map creating five new winnable seats for the GOP.
 The vote follows prodding by President Donald Trump, eager to stave off 
		a midterm defeat that would deprive his party of control of the House of 
		Representatives, and weeks of delays after dozens of Texas Democratic 
		state lawmakers fled the state in protest. Some Democrats returned 
		Monday, only to be assigned round-the-clock police escorts to ensure 
		their attendance at Wednesday's session. Those who refused to be 
		monitored were confined to the House floor, where they protested on a 
		livestream Tuesday night.
 
 Furious national Democrats have vowed payback for the Texas map, with 
		California's legislature poised to approve new maps adding more 
		Democratic-friendly seats later this week. The map would still need to 
		be approved by that state's voters in November.
 
 Normally, states redraw maps once a decade with new census figures. But 
		Trump is lobbying other conservative-controlled states like Indiana and 
		Missouri to also try to squeeze new GOP-friendly seats out of their maps 
		as his party prepares for a difficult midterm election next year.
 
 In Texas, Democrats spent the day before the vote continuing to draw 
		attention to the extraordinary lengths the Republicans who run the 
		legislature were going to ensure it takes place. Democratic state Rep. 
		Nicole Collier started it when she refused to sign what Democrats called 
		the “permission slip” needed to leave the House chamber, a half-page 
		form allowing Department of Public Safety troopers to follow them. She 
		spent Monday night and Tuesday on the House floor, where she set up a 
		livestream while her Democratic colleagues outside had plainclothes 
		officers following them to their offices and homes.
 
		 
		Dallas-area Rep. Linda Garcia said she drove three hours home from 
		Austin with an officer following her. When she went grocery shopping, he 
		went down every aisle with her, pretending to shop, she said. As she 
		spoke to The Associated Press by phone, two unmarked cars with officers 
		inside were parked outside her home.
 “It’s a weird feeling,” she said. “The only way to explain the entire 
		process is: It’s like I’m in a movie.”
 
 The trooper assignments, ordered by Republican House Speaker Dustin 
		Burrows, was another escalation of a redistricting battle that has 
		widened across the country. Trump is pushing GOP state officials to tilt 
		the map for the 2026 midterms more in his favor to preserve the GOP’s 
		slim House majority, and Democrats nationally have rallied around 
		efforts to retaliate.
 
 Other Democrats join the protest
 
 House Minority Leader Gene Wu, from Houston, and state Rep. Vince Perez, 
		of El Paso, stayed overnight with Collier, who represents a 
		minority-majority district in Fort Worth.
 
 On Tuesday, more Democrats returned to the Capitol to tear up the slips 
		they had signed and stay on the House floor, which has a lounge and 
		restrooms for members.
 
 Dallas-area Rep. Cassandra Garcia Hernandez called their protest a 
		“slumber party for democracy,” and she said Democrats were holding 
		strategy sessions on the floor.
 
 “We are not criminals,” Houston Rep. Penny Morales Shaw said.
 
		
		 
		[to top of second column] | 
            
			 
            Texas state troopers post outside of the House Chamber where 
			Democratic Texas state Rep. Nicole Collier refuses to leave due to a 
			required law enforcement escort, Tuesday, Aug. 19, 2025, in Austin, 
			Texas. (AP Photo/Eric Gay) 
            
			
			 
            Collier said having officers shadow her was an attack on her dignity 
			and an attempt to control her movements.
 Republican leader says Collier ‘is well within her rights’
 
 Burrows brushed off Collier's protest, saying he was focused on 
			important issues, such as providing property tax relief and 
			responding to last month’s deadly floods. His statement Tuesday 
			morning did not mention redistricting, and his office did not 
			immediately respond to other Democrats joining Collier.
 
 “Rep. Collier’s choice to stay and not sign the permission slip is 
			well within her rights under the House Rules,” Burrows said.
 
 Under those rules, until Wednesday’s scheduled vote, the chamber’s 
			doors are locked, and no member can leave “without the written 
			permission of the speaker.”
 
 To do business Wednesday, 100 of 150 House members must be present.
 
 The GOP wants 5 more seats in Texas
 
 The GOP plan is designed to send five additional Republicans from 
			Texas to the U.S. House. Texas Democrats returned to Austin after 
			Democrats in California launched an effort to redraw their state’s 
			districts to take five seats from Republicans.
 
 Democrats also said they were returning because they expect to 
			challenge the new maps in court.
 
 Republicans issued civil arrest warrants to bring the Democrats back 
			after they left the state Aug. 3, and Republican Gov. Greg Abbott 
			asked the state Supreme Court to oust Wu and several other Democrats 
			from office. The lawmakers also face a fine of $500 for every day 
			they were absent.
 
 How officers shadowed Democratic lawmakers
 
 Democrats reported different levels of monitoring. Houston Rep. 
			Armando Walle said he wasn’t sure where his police escort was, but 
			there was still a heightened police presence in the Capitol, so he 
			felt he was being monitored closely.
 
 Some Democrats said the officers watching them were friendly. But 
			Austin Rep. Sheryl Cole said in a social media post that when she 
			went on her morning walk Tuesday, the officer following her lost her 
			on the trail, got angry and threatened to arrest her.
 
            
			 
			Garcia said her 9-year-old son was with her as she drove home, and 
			each time she looked in the rearview mirror, she could see the 
			officer close behind. He came inside a grocery store where she 
			shopped with her son.
 “I would imagine that this is the way it feels when you’re 
			potentially shoplifting and someone is assessing whether you’re 
			going to steal," she said.
 
 ___
 
 Riccardi reported from Denver. John Hanna in Topeka, Kansas, and 
			Sara Cline in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, contributed to this report.
 
			
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